You clearly have a very particular, narrow idea of what a "user" is, and
a very muddy idea of how research works.

Could be, but you sayign it amounts to ad hominem, right?

a very muddy idea of how research works. Obviously getting an optical
jukebox isn't practical for Joe Public sitting in his flat, but it makes
great sense for lots of users in larger settings. Perhaps more to the

Joe Public? Not even a SOHO affair or a startup will have a jukebox. Not even a normal university campus will have one (though, CS/CE/EE "labs" may be exceptions). It's not worth the effort and the price. Magnetic (e.g. hard disk), solid-state (e.g. NAND Flash), and "conventional" optical (e.g. a CD/DVD-R in a drive or at most a duplicator machine) is so "cheap" no one will think of using a jukebox.

By the way, that's only an "example" of how far fetched the Plan 9 paradigm is to the normal user--who "isn't" Joe Public for the most part.

Put another way: the topic under research wasn't "how do we provide the
backup functionality people are asking for?", but "how would having daily
dumps change the way you work? would that be useful?". It's a less
product- oriented set of questions, but produces more fundamental results.

// Plan 9 seems to be a "niche" OS, as I pointed out before.

That may well be true, or at least that it isn't mainstream and
mass-market. That's never been its objective, and I'm sorry if you wasted
your time based on misunderstanding that.

Fine with me. Did those "fundamental" results end in "visible" results that people could enjoy? If yes, then no need to complain about "people" not recognizing your system; if no, revise your goals or don't complain about the lack of recognition. Those who "can" appreciate fundamental results are already doing so, e.g. Russ Cox and a handful of other top-notch CS people in a handful of top-notch universities. My "open letter" was written from a lowlife's standpoint.

// UTF-8 in an English-only "user" paradigm is only extravagance.

We've got enough folks around here who use something other than English
as their primary language with their computer that this complaing falls
down. You're right that there's more research to be done here, such as on
right-to-left input methods and composing characters, but that's far from
the same thing.

Are your non-English-speaking people capable of doing their research paper in some localized TeX/troff/groff/[some other typesetting software] version, or writing an email in their native tongue? Or reading their non-English non-Latin email? Or properly indexing their set of non-English documents using a simple search? "Without innocence, the cross is only idol." Without applications "features" are only burden.

If the UI model doesn't work for you, well, that's a shame, I guess. Based
on the bash love from earlier posts, I'm going to hazard a guess that your
complaints are largely based on the old keyboard vs. mouse argument. I
doubt hauling out the old references would be convincing once you've
already made up your mind.

On the contrary, while I do like using keyboard I'm very much a "polymath." Mouses are very good input devices for certain applications. The way the mouse is used--or "abused"--in rio and acme poses a problem. It is the "easy way out" to attribute that to my--probably Windows-doped--taste. There "is" a least common denominator that accommodates the basics of all tastes, and "that" is lacking in rio.

Window decorations (as they're called in X-speak) are not "mere decorations," they're useful. The two button (+/- wheel) mouse is prevalent because for most people only the index and middle finger are robust enough. The ring finger is never on par with them, except of course with the unnecessary adjustment Plan 9 users seem to go through. Assigning the middle finger to both second and third buttons is another solution which is equally uncomfortable.

Microsoft certainly has put a lot of money into researching human interfacing and the outcome is free for all to get and implement. Don't think for a moment that because it's Microsoft it has to be taken lightly. Hundreds of small rounded corners have made the Windows GUI experience a much better experience than that of "any" alternative GUI.

--On Monday, June 30, 2008 7:07 PM -0400 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

// Systems research? Did you actually "research" how a normal user used
their  // computer? Did you even try to guess how a normal user used
their system?  // Did you do that and end up with a technical manual
whose prime example for  // backup strategy involves a "Jukebox?"

You clearly have a very particular, narrow idea of what a "user" is, and
a very muddy idea of how research works. Obviously getting an optical
jukebox isn't practical for Joe Public sitting in his flat, but it makes
great sense for lots of users in larger settings. Perhaps more to the
point, experience with fs(4) led pretty directly to the current
construction of fs(3), fossil(4), and venti(6) - all of which are much
more suitabe for Joe.

Put another way: the topic under research wasn't "how do we provide the
backup functionality people are asking for?", but "how would having daily
dumps change the way you work? would that be useful?". It's a less
product- oriented set of questions, but produces more fundamental results.

// Plan 9 seems to be a "niche" OS, as I pointed out before.

That may well be true, or at least that it isn't mainstream and
mass-market. That's never been its objective, and I'm sorry if you wasted
your time based on misunderstanding that.

// UTF-8 in an English-only "user" paradigm is only extravagance.

We've got enough folks around here who use something other than English
as their primary language with their computer that this complaing falls
down. You're right that there's more research to be done here, such as on
right-to-left input methods and composing characters, but that's far from
the same thing.

If the UI model doesn't work for you, well, that's a shame, I guess. Based
on the bash love from earlier posts, I'm going to hazard a guess that your
complaints are largely based on the old keyboard vs. mouse argument. I
doubt hauling out the old references would be convincing once you've
already made up your mind.
Anthony







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